Tag: excise tax

  • Fifteen EU Members Pushing for Excise Hikes on Tobacco

    Fifteen EU Members Pushing for Excise Hikes on Tobacco

    A majority of EU member states have called for the European Commission to press ahead with a long-delayed plan to tax vapes and raise minimum excise rates on cigarettes and cigars, according to Financial Times. The letter—signed by Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Czechia, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, Latvia, The Netherlands, Slovakia, Slovenia, and Spain—called on the Commission to take “without delay the necessary steps” to update the directive.

    The Tobacco Excise Tax Directive (TED) was controversially left out of the Commission’s 2025 work program, though some states have been pushing for higher taxes on both tobacco and alternative products such as e-cigarettes, heated tobacco, and nicotine pouches. Unlike traditional tobacco, alternative products still lack an EU-wide excise framework. Euractiv reported last week that the EU commissioner in charge of taxation, Wopke Hoekstra, was testing the waters for such an initiative.

    “They want her to unblock the proposal, which is yet to be adopted by the commission and would, for the first time, set minimum taxation rates for vapes, nicotine pouches and heated tobacco,” Paola Tamma and Andy Bounds wrote for Financial Times. “It would also substantially raise minimum excise rates for cigarettes and cigars to harmonize taxation across the bloc and reduce tobacco fraud.”

    “The current scope and provisions of the directive are insufficient to enable member states to deal with the significant challenges posed by ongoing developments and trends in the European tobacco market, including the emergence of novel products,” the 15 EU finance and economy ministers wrote in the letter.

    Initially scheduled for 2022, the commission delayed the bill because of concerns about the impact that rising excise taxes could have at a time when inflation hit double digits across the bloc. Olaf, the European Anti-Fraud Office, estimates lost revenue from illicit tobacco to be more than €10 billion a year.

    The bill, however, requires unanimous approval. Twelve countries did not sign the letter, with Romania, Italy, and Greece among the most vocal opponents of revising the directive. A letter from the dissenting countries last month said they did not deem it necessary ‘‘to proceed…to a comprehensive revision of the overall EU legislation”. They also added that smoking rates are already falling. In a leaked version of the 2022 proposal, excise rates would have increased by 100% for cigarettes, 200% for rolling tobacco, and 900% for cigars and cigarillos.

    Paul Varakas, director of the European Cigar Manufacturers Association, said it was ‘‘out of touch and completely irresponsible in the context of an uncertain trade war.”

    An EU diplomat representing a southern state told Euractiv that high tobacco taxation in France and the Netherlands had resulted in black markets and increased cross-border shopping, with the diplomat accusing Paris and The Hague of pushing others to “repeat the same mistake”.

  • Philippines: Tobacco Orgs Backing Tax Moratorium

    Philippines: Tobacco Orgs Backing Tax Moratorium

    Seeking a “sweet spot,” the Philippines’ government is considering a moratorium on tobacco excise tax hikes in order to curb illicit trade and protect its revenue. Currently, the excise tax is P60 ($1.03) per pack and grows 5% annually. A pack of illicit cigarettes can be purchased for P40 ($0.69) per pack, less than the tax itself.

    According to the Food and Nutrition Research Institute, smoking in the country increased from 18.5% in 2021 to 23.2% in 2023. Over the same period, illicit cigarettes increased 13.6% to 19.8%. Despite the increase in smoking, the Bureau of Internal Revenue has watched its collected excise taxes steadily decline each year, going from P176.48 billion ($3 billion) in 2021 to P134 billion ($2.3 billion) last year, P51 billion below budget.

    “Illicit trade thrives due to the availability of untaxed cigarettes sold at a fraction of legitimate products,” said Jericho Nograles, president of the Philippine Tobacco Institute (PTI). “Legal cigarettes are up to five times more expensive than their illicit counterparts.”

    Both the PTI and the National Tobacco Administration (NTA) supported the tax moratorium for 2026, saying it is a “practical” and “targeted” solution against illicit cigarette trade.

    “By pausing the excise tax increase for 2026, we can temporarily stabilize the market and reduce the price disparity between legitimate and illicit cigarettes,” NTA administrator and CEO Belinda Sanchez said. “This pause will help legitimate manufacturers regain competitiveness, which is crucial to restoring demand for locally produced tobacco leaf for local consumption.

    “The widening gap between the prices of legitimate and illicit cigarettes, aggravated by successive excise tax increases, has incentivized the proliferation of smuggled and counterfeit products.”

    While the moratorium has been discussed for some time, the House of Representatives recently passed on second reading House Bill 11360, which would replace the moratorium and instead impose lower tax rates on tobacco products, proposing a schedule where the excise tax is raised 2% in even-numbered years and 4% in odd.

    Pointing to the billions they are losing in revenue, Department of Finance Secretary Ralph Recto said they are open to all proposals and “hopes the government can find a sweet spot.”